THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 25, No. 4 (2003) Fred Miller, Defensive Tackle From the “Iron Men” of Homer, Louisiana, to the Super Bowl By Jim Sargent When Fred Miller began his final high school season in Homer, Louisiana, in 1957, he shared the same unspoken dreams of most of his teammates. He and his football buddies hoped Homer High would have a good year. Most of his teammates also hoped they could play college football and earn degrees. By the time Miller took off his pads for the last time after the 1972 season, football had provided him with a good life. Fred had anchored the line on Homer’s championship team, received All-American honors on two Louisiana State University bowl-winning squads, won Pro Bowl recognition three times with the Baltimore Colts in the National Football League, and earned a Super Bowl Ring in 1971. In other words, Miller had the ability and the good fortune of playing on outstanding teams at the high school, college, and pro levels. He still has good friends who played alongside him on all three teams. Fed says the camaraderie and the fleeting glory he experienced on those gridirons of three or four decades ago made all of the up-and-downs worthwhile. Born on August 8, 1940, Fred grew up in Homer, a small town in the oil field region of northern Louisiana. Most people in the area loved high school football. The Homer oil field became a boom area in the 1940s after H.L. Hunt drilled his first well within 20 miles. After Hunt’s field came in, El Dorado, Haynesville, and Homer became the world’s oil capital. During the boom times the population of Homer grew to about 5,000. The local high school graduated only 35 or 40 seniors each year. But Homer always played football against larger schools. In fact, local businessmen would drive up to the Pennsylvania oil areas and offer jobs in the Homer field to fathers with oil rig experience who also had big, strong, talented sons. In 2003 Fred Miller talked about football memories dating to his first three-game season as a sixth grader. People in Homer would pitch in money to help the school buy football equipment. With no junior high, the school district placed the eighth grade in the high school. After lettering as a freshman, Fred started at center and tackle his last three years. In his senior year, the Homer Pelicans had 19 boys go out for football. They fielded only a varsity team. Fred recalled, “Our coach, Glenn Gossett, hired a new assistant coach that year. When the assistant came in and saw the 19 players, he wanted to go back to his job in the oil fields. But they all stayed with us.” Homer competed at the double-A level, but most of the opponents were triple-A schools. Homer’s size made it a class B school. But when they had a great track team two years earlier, the administration moved Homer to Class AA. A local sportswriter coined the term “Iron Men” after Homer, playing eleven starters and two subs out of 18 dressed for the game, outplayed a supposedly superior Bossier team. The game ended in a 6-6 tie, but only after Homer’s winning touchdown was called back on a penalty. After the tie and the 13-6 loss to Ruston, Homer consistently drubbed larger schools by surprising scores, including 59-0 over Many, 46-0 over unbeaten Plain Dealing, and 33-0 over Springhill. After stopping unbeaten Minden, 19-6, the Pelicans won the District I-AA title by stomping St. John’s, 60-0. Playing in the North Louisiana semifinals, the “Iron Men” dumped Pineville in the rain, 6-0. Homer then won the North Louisiana title by beating Ruston, 21-15. With a few minutes left in the third quarter, Ruston led, 16-0. But after what one writer called “the greatest comeback by a high school football team in modern years,” the Iron Men won, 21-16. For players like Miller, quarterback Bobby Flurry, halfbacks Ray Wilkins and Sammy Camp, running backs Daryl Ackley and G.W. Zachary, center Ray Weaver, guards Herman Coleman, Buddy Parker, and Kenneth Hood, and tackles John Wayne Odom, Ronnie Terry, and Tommy Owens, ends Charles Lewis, Gladney Davidson, Eugene Pixley, Jimmy Andrews, and Billy Thomas, their great season finally ended on December 20, 1957, when Morgan City won the Louisiana state championship over Homer, 19-7. 1 THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 25, No. 4 (2003) “We would not have lost,” Miller remembered, “if we had not lost our halfback, Ray Wilkins, who gained 1700 and some yards for the season and scored over 100 points. He separated a rib cartilage, and couldn’t play. And our little fullback separated a shoulder.” Miller added, “Every kid in our starting lineup in 1957, and a couple that started for us in 1958, had the opportunity to go to college on a full or partial scholarship.” At Louisiana State, Miller started for three years (freshmen couldn’t play varsity ball). The squad had three teams, the White, or first team, which played offense and defense; the Gold was an offensive team—they would come in to return a punt and run one series of downs; and the “Chinese Bandits” were a defensive team. When LSU punted, the Bandits took the punt and played one series of downs. In his first year Miller played with the Bandits. After that, he captained the Bandit defense but played mostly with the White team both ways. In 1963 LSU finished with a 10-1 record, including a shutout of Texas in the Cotton Bowl: “We played Colorado in our junior year in the Orange Bowl, and we beat them. After that, our coach, Paul Dietzell, left and went to Army. Charley Mac [McClendon] took over. In our senior year, we went to the Cotton bowl and beat Texas. We shut them out, 13-0. Texas has not been shut out since in a bowl game.” Miller graduated with a Bachelor’s in Agriculture on January 29, 1963. Oakland of the American Football League drafted him, but Fred didn’t consider it. The Colts had drafted him: “The Colts signed me for two years. I got ten grand for a bonus. My first year I played for $14,000 and my second year for $15,000. I was told if I negotiated with the American League, I would have been better off. But I had no intentions of going. I wanted to play in the NFL.” Fred knew several teammates, because he played in the Senior Bowl, the Coaches’ All-American Game, and the College All- Star Game against the previous year’s NFL champions. “My rookie year was Don Shula’s first year. Weeb Ewbank drafted us, but before we got here, the Colts had fired Ewbank and hired Shula. Mackey at tight end and Vogel at left tackle started right away. They needed them. “The first ball game in my rookie year was the only game I didn’t start in my whole career with Baltimore, if I was able and not injured. I always had back problems. After the first six or seven games, I wore a back brace for the rest of my career. “About the third or fourth game, Jerry Logan started at safety. So we had four kids who came up together who became starters before the year was out. And Willie Richardson was getting playing time at wide receiver. He started in 1966. “Gary Cuozzo was also in our group of rookies. He played behind John Unitas, until he got a shot to play. Later, Gary dislocated his shoulder, and the Colts traded him to Minnesota.” Asked in 2003 about his team’s togetherness in Baltimore, Fred recollected, “We walked into a good group. People say a lot of things about Carroll Rosenbloom. But Carroll was a pretty caring guy. He helped a lot with that team feeling, from the top down. Don Kellett, our general manager, insisted that the players become part of the community, and we did. Consequently, a lot of guys from that era stayed in Baltimore. “When I spent part of a year with the Redskins in 1973, I realized what we had in Baltimore. We all did things together. The wives did things together. New people would come in, and the wives would get rookies’ wives hooked up with doctors, that kind of stuff. We used to go out as a group to one or two restaurants, maybe 10 or 15 at one restaurant and another group at another restaurant. Or we’d have parties at one person’s house, and everybody came. We looked after one another. We still do.” In 1963, Fred’s rookie season, the Colts finished with an 8-6 record and ranked third in the Western Conference. The Chicago Bears (11-1-2) won the West and eventually the NFL Championship over the New York Giants. The Colts lost five of their first eight games, but Shula’s squad kept improving. Johnny Unitas, the modest Hall of Famer, guard Jim Parker, end Ray Berry, halfback-flanker Lenny Moore, and defensive end Gino Marchetti were among the veterans from Baltimore's NFL championship teams of 1958 and 1959. Shula worked in the new talent, including Jerry Hill at fullback, Tom Matte at halfback, end John Mackey, offensive tackle Bob Vogel, defensive back Jerry Logan, and Miller. In the fourth quarter of the opener against the Giants, a 37-28 loss at Baltimore’s Memorial Stadium, Shula subbed Miller for 6’7” 285-pound veteran John Diehl.
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